Follow
Share

Friends will always take your side, so I'm hoping to get some guidance from people I don't know, but are in a similar situation. This will be a long read, grab a coffee.


I'm 44 years old (female), I have 2 older brothers (51 and 47). We all live in Connecticut. My son (23) and I live upstairs from my mother in the home that she and we grew up in (which she owns). My dad passed away in 2009 from combat related lung cancer due to exposure to Agent Orange. Because of the nature of his illness, my mom gets "survivor benefits" through the VA (a monthly payment and health/Rx insurance). So, her monthly income is from Social Security and the VA Survivor Benefits (she is a retired hairdresser, no pension there).


My oldest brother (single, no kids) has his own home about 40 minutes away. My middle brother (divorced, no kids) lives downstairs with my mom (moving in after his divorce 10 years ago). He comes with his own baggage and story. Prior to his divorce he was diagnosed with tonsil cancer and received radiation pellets which has made him cancer free since the surgery. Cancer made it difficult for him to swallow so for a few years he had a G-tube (feeding tube). This brother is also an alcoholic. To clarify, a hardcore alcoholic. With the G-tube he found that he could put vodka into it. This didn't go well and further spiraled his addiction out of control - leading to him being in the ICU at Yale for quite some time, his weight dropping to about 97lbs on his 5'9 frame. But, he bounced back. He had the feeding tube removed over 8 years ago, but never stopped drinking or smoking. He's been in and out of rehab across the state more times than I can count, with sobriety only lasting until he acclimates back at home. His behavior is erratic and unpredictable. He doesn't work, rarely drives and hardly gets out of bed. Needless to say, this puts an enormous mental burden on my mother (as well as my son and I). She can't "throw him out" because she would need to go through the legal system to have him evicted. Instead, she "deals" with his behavior. My son and I both work full time. While I don't pay my mother rent (obviously I pay my own utilities), I pay for the year-round yard maintenance, bring her to all of her doctor's appointments, do her shopping, balance her checkbook (after 50 years she suddenly can't do it herself), cook dinner a few times a week or take her out to dinner (if I don't cook she'll make herself popcorn or an ice cream cone!). Since I live upstairs, I'm at her beck and call 24/7.


She was recently diagnosed with COPD, Congestive Heart Failure and Sleep Apnea - adding to having had Type 2 diabetes for about 15 years. She's 73, but has herself living like an invalid. She has 1 friend left whom she rarely reaches out to (sadly, in the past 6 months she lost her best friend as well as the bf's husband and husband's sister - she was close with all of them). My mom is mentally fit. She can drive herself around town to run her own errands, but waits until the weekend when I'm around to taxi her. Selfishly, this irritates me because I work all week. When I make plans to be with my boyfriend she gets angry! I get that she's lonely, but If I make plans I have to hear how awful and selfish I am, knowing she's alone all week. She's never lived independently and has NO independence about her at all. Often she'll repeat things she's told me and talks non-stop. She has no interest in being social or going to a senior center, rather she opts to stay in the house all day then complain on the weekend that she doesn't go anywhere all week. Neither brother even attempts to help (one isn't conscience long enough and the other "needs to unwind" when he gets out of work). She'll say "Oh, maybe I'll just die then you won't have to take care of me" (if you're familiar with "The Soprano's", my mother sounds like Tony's). I've asked if she'd like to talk to someone but that makes her angrier. She's unhappy, joyless, miserable. It's draining.

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Think about the old Cecil B. DeMille advice: "Never accept anything for nothing - it costs too much in the end." Paying no rent gives your mom the idea you owe her.
Helpful Answer (8)
Report

The short answer (that you're probably not going to like) is to move out. Your mom is only 73! And she's already a wreck in more ways than one, and baby-ish. She's not going to change, only will get worse. Moving out does not mean you don't love her, but it puts the priority where it should lay, on you and your son's lives, not hers.

If you stay you WILL be her de-facto 24/7 caregiver. There are a lot of dysfunctional attachments going on in that home, co-dependencies. You need to create healthy boundaries because none currently exist to protect you and your son (who is an adult too, BTW). Moving out will be the main move in reclaiming your life. If you stay you will burn out and be much less able to help her. It's not fair to you or your son. I come from an Italian-American immigrant family that had the women-take-care-of-the-elderly cultural thing. I said fuhgedaboudit. Not this girl.

If you move out, then your mom will have to deal with how to afford to stay in her house, which you will begin to see is probably more like a stone tied around her neck because it's making everyone make unhealthy, unproductive decisions. Without the house the deadbeat brother will have to get his own life. Without the house your mom can afford to maybe live in a nice senior community where she'll be with others and maybe even enjoy life again. She probably is thinking "those places" like they were in the old days: horrible and depressing where people go to be forgotten and die. Well, that's not true anymore. Without the burden of trying to "keep" the house you and your son won't be guilt-riddled indentured caregivers and can move on to make the most of your young lives. If I were you I'd start by leaving. Your mom won't like it. Your brothers won't like it. But YOU WILL like it, eventually. And so glad you did it. May you have inner strength, great wisdom and peace in your heart to do a difficult but necessary thing.
Helpful Answer (7)
Report
DMDubey76 Mar 2021
Interesting you should mention this. She knows that I've been looking at houses and condos (nearby, CT is small to begin with, and I'm talking in the same town/next town over). This past weekend, much to her chagrin, I brought her for a tour of a house I was looking at. It was adorable and affordable. She was NOT happy. We had a blow-out argument when we got home. She said I "used her and my father" living there rent free while I saved up money. Said she "raised my son". Which, yes, she babysat him because I went back to work full-time after I had him. Nonstop calling me an ungrateful b*tch, etc. Really trying to get a rise out of me, but I'm not an arguer. I went upstairs and ignored her non-stop texts telling me how awful and spiteful I am - and I can't leave her there with Joe (the alcoholic brother). By the morning, not through her influence, I decided to hold off on putting a bid on the house. She went from not speaking to me to now saying "Hello" when I get home from work. The truth is, our current house needs to be emptied and I'm in the process of getting quotes for dumpsters. I can't think clearly about packing up and moving until we rid the place of the crap that has accumulated. While not a hoarder per se, my mother cannot throw things away. She still has totes of her father's and sister's clothes - they both passed away over 15 years ago. She buys every small appliance ever made (air fryer? why get one when you can get them in different sizes? spoiler alert - she rarely cooks anymore). I've already started filling garbage bags in preparation of the dumpster's arrival. I get the whole "bide your time" suggestion, sometimes that's easier said than done. In the will the house is split 3 ways (of course, because that's the old school way to do it - regardless of which kid is the one that did the heavy lifting). I want nothing to do with that house when the time comes. I'll take my 1/3 of the money from the sale of it, which I used to say, "No, I don't want anything, I just want my freedom". But, I'm older now and see how much work I do for her and the house. Also, I work for one of the biggest healthcare corporations in CT, ironically enough in the senior services division. I've offered to bring her to personalized tours of the Assisted Living communities and she's not having it!
(0)
Report
See 3 more replies
You and your son need to move out immediately. Make finding a new place your number one top priority in life.
Mom has made you the designated caregiver and what almost always happens first is you become the whipping post for all her anger, frustration, and resentment. You also become the guilt bank for her. She's making guilt deposits into a savings account if you will that she can withdraw and use later in her time of need. She's conditioning you to make sure you don't leave and will take care of her when she becomes needy. It won't stop there either, my friend. No, it won't. You'll also be the designated caregiver for your brother too.
Think of what mom is playing at as like a wild animal out on plains. A lion for example. The lion pees on a rock and marks his territory. That place is his. He eats first before even the his own cubs. All the other lions stand down to him because that place is his. Your mom in a matter of speaking is doing the same thing. Because you live on her "ground" and don't pay rent she knows that you're beholden to her. Even if you offer to pay her rent, guaranteed she will refuse it. By accepting rent from you it gives you certain rights and lessens her power over you. So she will refuse it and by doing so entitles her to treat you with such disrespect and blatant disregard. It keeps you at her beck and call. The added guilt is an insurance policy to make sure you stay right under her foot.
Get the hell out of there as soon as you can. The longer you stay the worse it will get.
Helpful Answer (7)
Report
NeedHelpWithMom Mar 2021
Wholeheartedly agree with your thoughts. Her mom is manipulative and emotionally blackmailing her.

Moving away from mom would be the best thing in the world.
(3)
Report
See 1 more reply
As I see it, you are more or less enabling your Mother, possibly your alcoholic brother as well, in being quite dependent. Your Mom may have another decade or two to live; your brother likely longer. You say this is type two diabetes; I am assuming some overweight then, as well for your Mom, both of will exacerbate her CHF, her heart condition, her lung problems.
Your Mom is in the habit of depending upon you, and in all likelihood she excuses herself with "she has FREE RENT" And in fact this is true. With free rent for some years I am hopeful that you have done a good amount of saving on your own part.
My advice? Move into an apartment on your own. Disengage. Allow your Mom to rent out the upper unit where you live rent free now, or to move her son there, alleviating some of the congestion of living with an alcoholic. This would give her either relief of a son, OR rental income to help her situation, to hire cars to her appointments and so on.
You and your son deserve to get on with your lives. If Mom is 73, and you 44 I am assuming your son may be or is of age. He will want to get on with his own life now.
This is just how I would do it. I hope you will have many who will give you ideas that you can cherry pick and at least begin to think about and plan around. You clearly are a smart cookie. You have given us above a marvelously clear idea of the situation as is. And AS IS is how it will remain. You cannot change the acts or behaviors of any of the players in the drama. You are only in control of your own life.
I sure do wish you the best, welcome you to the Forum and hope to hear your updates.
Helpful Answer (6)
Report
BurntCaregiver Mar 2021
AlvaDeer, I must disagree with you on one point.
The situation will not remain as it is. The situation will most assuredly get worse. Get out now.
(2)
Report
You're enabling both of their poor lifestyle choices.

Move out and ignore any whinging she does about it.
Helpful Answer (6)
Report

DM, I just saw your reply to Geaton.

Your 73 year old mother just made it LOUD and CLEAR to you that she absolutely expects you to be her elder care plan! Trying to dump guilt on you about living there "for free" and then the zinger about your son! She sounds like a selfish narcissist to me.

My advice is to move out ASAP!!
Helpful Answer (6)
Report
BurntCaregiver Mar 2021
That's the oldest trick in the book, ExhaustedPiper.
To not charge any rent so the person is now beholden, and that entitles the elder to demand anything they want and to treat that person as abusively as they want.
Even if she offered her mother, even demanded paying rent to her, she would refuse it. Accepting it would mean mom loses some of her power over her daughter.
Just find a new place. The poster and her son both work full-time and have lived rent-free for some time so finding a new home shouldn't put them into hardship.
(2)
Report
See 1 more reply
Your house sounds like one big boat & you are all in it together. Mother is keen to stay Captain, Brother is snoozing in the hold, you & Son are the rowing crew - keeping it all afloat.

Maybe mutiny is in the air!

You may sometimes feel powerless to make your family understand your need for change. They may well fight you to keep things as they are... But you DO have power here.

Stop rowing so hard. Slow down.

Explain you will still be FAMILY. You just won't be all the help going forward.

Offer many non-you alternatives (senior centre for company, deliveries & taxis for errands etc). Do you have an elder care assessment service in your area? To explore what Mother needs & qualifies for?

Then find you own little boat to row. This will mean taking on the responsibility of rent or your own mortgage, but this is taking responsibility for yourself & is the price of freedom.

This will force them to either row their own boats, hire other rowers or sink (into crises) depending on the choices they make.
Helpful Answer (6)
Report
DMDubey76 Mar 2021
I absolutely love this response. Thank you <3
(2)
Report
Dubey, what is your plan to change this situation?

You only have control over your own behavior, as you well know.

So what do you think the best thing to change might be?
Helpful Answer (6)
Report

Reading your reply really helped in addition to your post. Please ask yourself why you feel any obligation toward a hopeless alcoholic who’s committing slow suicide and a parent who’s manipulating your time and presence, and on top of that calling you names and throwing accusations each time she doesn’t get what she wants??? Your health and future matter, please get out of this house as fast as possible. Don’t teach your son that being treated poorly is acceptable. It’s not on you that the house is cluttered by her stuff, you clean it out and it will only re accumulate. Boundaries is an excellent book, read it soon and you’ll be better able to place healthy boundaries in your life. I wish you the best in making changes
Helpful Answer (5)
Report
BurntCaregiver Mar 2021
Daughter1930, the poster would naturally feel some level of obligation because it's her brother and her mother. How many people have a heart made of stone and wouldn't feel something towards them?
No one has to tolerate being treated abusively or has to become enslaved because their family needs a caregiver and one person is singled out because that's who the ones in need of care will accept.
She can still help her brother and her mother, but at a distance. Whatever assistance she offers to give, has to be on her terms not theirs.
(2)
Report
See 1 more reply
I don't see that anyone in this house is completely independent. OP, has had a roof over her head her entire life provided by mom. She does not want to give that up. OP, you are the only one that can change your situation. Time to move on and gain your independence. Mom can and will have to figure it out.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report
CTTN55 Mar 2021
Thanks for pointing out why OP doesn't seem to have any intention of moving out.
(3)
Report
See All Answers
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter